Joshua A Fogel

Degrees

Ph. D., History , Columbia University
M.A., History , Columbia University
B.A., History , University of Chicago

Professional Leadership

Editor, Sino-Japanese Studies (1988-2003, 2009-present), at www.chinajapan.org
Chair, Sino-Japanese Studies Committee, Association for Asian Studies
Councilor, Society for Cultural Interaction in East Asia, Kansai University (2009-present)
Editor, “The World of East Asia,” series of books published by the University of Hawai‘i Press (2007-present)
Editor, “Asian Interactions and Comparisons,” series of books jointly published by the Association for Asian Studies and the University of Hawai‘i Press (1997-2006)
Member, Editorial Board, Journal of the History of Ideas (2006-present)
Member, Editorial Board, The Asia Pacific Journal: Japan Focus (2006-2009)
Member, Executive, York Centre for Asian Research (2006-2011).

“Introduction: Texts and Their Transformations,” in Writing Histories in Japan: Texts and Their Transformations from Ancient Times through the Meiji Era (International Research Center for Japanese Studies, 2007), 1-10.

“Lust for Still Life: Chinese Painters in Japan and Japanese Painters in China in the 1860s and 1870s,” in Acquisition: Art and Ownership in Edo Japan, ed. Elizabeth Lillehoj (Floating World Editions, 2007), 149-68.

“On Translating Shiba Ryōtarō into English,” in Historical Consciousness, Historiography, and Modern Japanese Values, ed. James C. Baxter (International Research Center for Japanese Studies, 2006), 153-65.

“Translator’s Preface,” in Manchuria under Japanese Dominion, by Yamamuro Shin’ichi (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2006), vii-viii.

“Introduction: Herbert A. Giles and China,” to Herbert A. Giles and China: Two Early Classics of Modern Sinology (Fukuoka: Kurodahan Press, 2004), vii-xii.

“Introduction: Liang Qichao and Japan,” in The Role of Japan in Liang Qichao’s Introduction of Modern Western Civilization to China (Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California, Berkeley, 2004), 1-12.

“Chūgoku ni okeru dentō no sōzō to Nihon no kōken: Sai Jutsu no baai” 中国における伝統の創造と日本の貢献：崔述のばあい (The Japanese contribution to the Chinese invention of tradition: The case of Cui Shu), in Seiyō kindai bunmei to Chūka sekai 西洋近代文明と中華世界 (Modern Western civilization and the universe of China), ed. Hazama Naoki 狭間直樹 (Kyoto University Press, 2001), 55-71.

“Sino-Japanese Relations in Historical Perspective,” in China-Japan Relations: Old Animosities, New Possibilities (Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, 2001), 28-32.

“Learning How to Teach,” in Asia in the Core Curriculum (Heyman Center for the Humanities, Columbia University, 2000), 77-79.

“The Japanese and the Jews: A Comparative Look at the ‘Melting Pot’ of Harbin, 1900-1930,” in New Frontiers: Imperialism’s New Communities in East Asia, 1842-1952, ed. Robert Bickers and Christian Henriot (Manchester University Press, 2000), 88-108.

“Preface,” in The I Ching in Tokugawa Thought and Culture, by Wai-ming Ng (University of Hawai‘i Press, 2000), ix-x.

“Integrating into Chinese Society: A Comparison of the Japanese Communities of Shanghai and Harbin,” in Japan’s Competing Modernities: Issues in Culture and Democracy, 1900-1930, ed. Sharon Minichiello (University of Hawai‘i Press, 1998), 45-69.

“Nit-Chū kankei to Amerika” 日中関係とアメリカ (Sino-Japanese relations and the United States), in Sekai no naka no Nit-Chū kankei 世界のなかの日中関係 (Sino-Japanese relations within the world) (Hōrei bunkasha, 1996), 240-47.

“Sino-Japanese Studies in the United States,” in A New Paradigm on the Relationship between China and Japan in the 20th Century, ed. Nishimura Shigeo, Soejima Shōichi, Lang Weicheng, and Joshua Fogel (Nit-Chū-Bei kokusai waakushoppu hōkokusho, 1994), 29-45.

“Bibliography of Sino-Japanese Studies,” in A New Paradigm on the Relationship between China and Japan in the 20th Century, ed. Nishimura Shigeo, Soejima Shōichi, Lang Weicheng, and Joshua Fogel (Nit-Chū-Bei kokusai waakushoppu hōkokusho, 1994), 47-63.

“Meiji no Nihonjin, Naitō Konan no baai” 明治の日本人、内藤湖南の場合 (A Japanese of the Meiji period, the case of Naitō Konan), in Sekai no naka no Nihonjin, kindai Nihon no hyōzō to shinsō 世界のなかの日本人、近代日本の表象と深層 (Japanese in the world: Representation and depth in modern Japan) (Kansai University Press, 1990), 267-71.

“Shmuel Niger and Yiddish Literary Criticism,” in Bilingualism in the History of Jewish Literature, by Shmuel Niger (University Press of America, 1990), 1-9.

“Introduction,” in Chinese Women in a Century of Revolution, 1850-1950, by Ono Kazuko (Stanford University Press, 1989), xix-xxvi.

“Zhanqian zai Zhongguo lüxing de Riben wenxuejia” 战前在中国旅行的日本文学家 (Japanese writers who traveled in China in the pre-war period), in Zhong-Ri guanxi shi guoji xueshu taolunhui lunwenji 中日关系史国际学术讨论会论文集 (Essays from an international academic symposium on the history of Sino-Japanese relations) (Beijing, 1988), 235-46.

“Itō Takeo and the Research Work of the South Manchurian Railway Company,” in Life along the South Manchurian Railway: The Memoirs of Itō Takeo (M. E. Sharpe, 1988), vii-xxxi.

“Ai Siqi: Professional Philosopher and Establishment Intellectual,” in Chinese Intellectuals and the State: Search for a New Relationship, ed. Merle Goldman (Council on East Asian Studies, Harvard University, 1987), 23-41.

“Introduction,” in Murder in a Peking Studio, by Chin Shunshin (Arizona State University Press, 1986), ix-xiv.

“Translator’s Introduction,” in Medieval Chinese Society and the Local “Community”, by Tanigawa Michio (University of California Press, 1985), xi-xxxvi.

“Editor’s Introduction,” in Naitō Konan and the Development of the Conception of Modernity in Chinese History (M. E. Sharpe, 1983), 3-11.

“On the ‘Rediscovery’ of the Chinese Past: Ts’ui Shu and Related Cases,” in Perspectives on a Changing China (Westview, 1979), 219-35.

“Introduction,” in Perspectives on a Changing China: Essays in Honor of Professor C. Martin Wilbur on the Occasion of His Retirement (Westview, 1979), 1-3.

Journal Articles

“The Recent Boom in Shanghai Studies,” Journal of the History of Ideas 71.2 (April 2010), 313-33.

“Chart of the Japanese Embassies to the Tang Court,” online at: http://chinajapan.org/resources/j-to-tang.html; and “Chart to the Embassies to the Ming Court,” online at: http://chinajapan.org/resources/j-to-ming.html.

“Issues in the Evolution of Modern China in East Asian Comparative Perspective,” The History Teacher 29.4 (August 1996), 425-48; reprinted in China’s Quest for Modernization: Historical Studies on Issues Concerning the Evolution of Modern Chinese Society, ed. Frederic Wakeman, Jr. and Wang Xi (Center for East Asian Studies, University of California, 1997), 352-81.

Book Reviews

Suping Lu, They Were in Nanjing: The Nanjing Massacre Witnessed by American and British Nationals, and Fei Fei Li, Robert Sabella, and David Liu, eds., Nanking 1937: Memory and Healing, in China Review International 15.1 (2008), 146-55.

Alexander Woodside, Lost Modernities: China, Vietnam, Korea, and the Hazards of World History, in The Chinese Historical Review 13.2 (Fall 2006), 405-7.

Inger Sigrun Brodey and Sammy I. Tsunematsu, trans., Rediscovering Natsume Sōseki, with the First English Translation of Travels in Manchuria and Korea, in Journal of Asian Studies 61.4 (November 2002), 1372-73.

Nicholas Clifford, “A Truthful Impression of the Country”: British and American Travel Writing in China, 1880-1949, in American Historical Review 107.4 (October 2002), 1196.

Rana Mitter, The Manchurian Myth: Nationalism, Resistance, and Collaboration in Modern China, in The Journal of Interdisciplinary History 32.3 (Winter 2002), 512-13.

Constantine N. Vaporis, Breaking Barriers: Travel and the State in Early Modern Japan, in Journal of Asian Studies 55.1 (February 1996), 179-80.

“Several Recent Works in Sino-Japanese Studies: The Modernization of Manchuria: An Annotated Bibliography by Ronald Suleski, Ajia jidai no Nit-Chū kankei, kako to mirai (Sino-Japanese relations in the Asian age, past and future) edited by Kojima Tomoyuki, Japanese Scholars of China: A Bibliographical Handbook compiled by John Timothy Wixted, and Jindai Ri-Zhong guanxi shi yanjiu rumen (Introduction to studies in the history of modern Sino-Japanese relations), transl. Zhou Qiqian,” in Sino-Japanese Studies 8.1 (October 1995), 66-68.

Shen Ren’an, Wakoku to Higashi Ajia (The state of Wa and East Asia) and Wu Anlong and Xiong Dayun, Chūgokujin no Nihon kenkyū shi (A history of Chinese studies of Japan), in Ribenxue 5 (1995), 323-26.

Forthcoming

The Role of Japan in Modern China Art (International and Area Studies, University of California, forthcoming).

“Art History and Sino-Japanese Relations,” in The Role of Japan in Modern China Art (International and Area Studies, University of California, forthcoming).

Degrees

Ph. D., History , Columbia University
M.A., History , Columbia University
B.A., History , University of Chicago

Professional Leadership

Editor, Sino-Japanese Studies (1988-2003, 2009-present), at www.chinajapan.org
Chair, Sino-Japanese Studies Committee, Association for Asian Studies
Councilor, Society for Cultural Interaction in East Asia, Kansai University (2009-present)
Editor, “The World of East Asia,” series of books published by the University of Hawai‘i Press (2007-present)
Editor, “Asian Interactions and Comparisons,” series of books jointly published by the Association for Asian Studies and the University of Hawai‘i Press (1997-2006)
Member, Editorial Board, Journal of the History of Ideas (2006-present)
Member, Editorial Board, The Asia Pacific Journal: Japan Focus (2006-2009)
Member, Executive, York Centre for Asian Research (2006-2011).

“Introduction: Texts and Their Transformations,” in Writing Histories in Japan: Texts and Their Transformations from Ancient Times through the Meiji Era (International Research Center for Japanese Studies, 2007), 1-10.

“Lust for Still Life: Chinese Painters in Japan and Japanese Painters in China in the 1860s and 1870s,” in Acquisition: Art and Ownership in Edo Japan, ed. Elizabeth Lillehoj (Floating World Editions, 2007), 149-68.

“On Translating Shiba Ryōtarō into English,” in Historical Consciousness, Historiography, and Modern Japanese Values, ed. James C. Baxter (International Research Center for Japanese Studies, 2006), 153-65.

“Translator’s Preface,” in Manchuria under Japanese Dominion, by Yamamuro Shin’ichi (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2006), vii-viii.

“Introduction: Herbert A. Giles and China,” to Herbert A. Giles and China: Two Early Classics of Modern Sinology (Fukuoka: Kurodahan Press, 2004), vii-xii.

“Introduction: Liang Qichao and Japan,” in The Role of Japan in Liang Qichao’s Introduction of Modern Western Civilization to China (Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California, Berkeley, 2004), 1-12.

“Chūgoku ni okeru dentō no sōzō to Nihon no kōken: Sai Jutsu no baai” 中国における伝統の創造と日本の貢献：崔述のばあい (The Japanese contribution to the Chinese invention of tradition: The case of Cui Shu), in Seiyō kindai bunmei to Chūka sekai 西洋近代文明と中華世界 (Modern Western civilization and the universe of China), ed. Hazama Naoki 狭間直樹 (Kyoto University Press, 2001), 55-71.

“Sino-Japanese Relations in Historical Perspective,” in China-Japan Relations: Old Animosities, New Possibilities (Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, 2001), 28-32.

“Learning How to Teach,” in Asia in the Core Curriculum (Heyman Center for the Humanities, Columbia University, 2000), 77-79.

“The Japanese and the Jews: A Comparative Look at the ‘Melting Pot’ of Harbin, 1900-1930,” in New Frontiers: Imperialism’s New Communities in East Asia, 1842-1952, ed. Robert Bickers and Christian Henriot (Manchester University Press, 2000), 88-108.

“Preface,” in The I Ching in Tokugawa Thought and Culture, by Wai-ming Ng (University of Hawai‘i Press, 2000), ix-x.

“Integrating into Chinese Society: A Comparison of the Japanese Communities of Shanghai and Harbin,” in Japan’s Competing Modernities: Issues in Culture and Democracy, 1900-1930, ed. Sharon Minichiello (University of Hawai‘i Press, 1998), 45-69.

“Nit-Chū kankei to Amerika” 日中関係とアメリカ (Sino-Japanese relations and the United States), in Sekai no naka no Nit-Chū kankei 世界のなかの日中関係 (Sino-Japanese relations within the world) (Hōrei bunkasha, 1996), 240-47.

“Sino-Japanese Studies in the United States,” in A New Paradigm on the Relationship between China and Japan in the 20th Century, ed. Nishimura Shigeo, Soejima Shōichi, Lang Weicheng, and Joshua Fogel (Nit-Chū-Bei kokusai waakushoppu hōkokusho, 1994), 29-45.

“Bibliography of Sino-Japanese Studies,” in A New Paradigm on the Relationship between China and Japan in the 20th Century, ed. Nishimura Shigeo, Soejima Shōichi, Lang Weicheng, and Joshua Fogel (Nit-Chū-Bei kokusai waakushoppu hōkokusho, 1994), 47-63.

“Meiji no Nihonjin, Naitō Konan no baai” 明治の日本人、内藤湖南の場合 (A Japanese of the Meiji period, the case of Naitō Konan), in Sekai no naka no Nihonjin, kindai Nihon no hyōzō to shinsō 世界のなかの日本人、近代日本の表象と深層 (Japanese in the world: Representation and depth in modern Japan) (Kansai University Press, 1990), 267-71.

“Shmuel Niger and Yiddish Literary Criticism,” in Bilingualism in the History of Jewish Literature, by Shmuel Niger (University Press of America, 1990), 1-9.

“Introduction,” in Chinese Women in a Century of Revolution, 1850-1950, by Ono Kazuko (Stanford University Press, 1989), xix-xxvi.

“Zhanqian zai Zhongguo lüxing de Riben wenxuejia” 战前在中国旅行的日本文学家 (Japanese writers who traveled in China in the pre-war period), in Zhong-Ri guanxi shi guoji xueshu taolunhui lunwenji 中日关系史国际学术讨论会论文集 (Essays from an international academic symposium on the history of Sino-Japanese relations) (Beijing, 1988), 235-46.

“Itō Takeo and the Research Work of the South Manchurian Railway Company,” in Life along the South Manchurian Railway: The Memoirs of Itō Takeo (M. E. Sharpe, 1988), vii-xxxi.

“Ai Siqi: Professional Philosopher and Establishment Intellectual,” in Chinese Intellectuals and the State: Search for a New Relationship, ed. Merle Goldman (Council on East Asian Studies, Harvard University, 1987), 23-41.

“Introduction,” in Murder in a Peking Studio, by Chin Shunshin (Arizona State University Press, 1986), ix-xiv.

“Translator’s Introduction,” in Medieval Chinese Society and the Local “Community”, by Tanigawa Michio (University of California Press, 1985), xi-xxxvi.

“Editor’s Introduction,” in Naitō Konan and the Development of the Conception of Modernity in Chinese History (M. E. Sharpe, 1983), 3-11.

“On the ‘Rediscovery’ of the Chinese Past: Ts’ui Shu and Related Cases,” in Perspectives on a Changing China (Westview, 1979), 219-35.

“Introduction,” in Perspectives on a Changing China: Essays in Honor of Professor C. Martin Wilbur on the Occasion of His Retirement (Westview, 1979), 1-3.

Journal Articles

“The Recent Boom in Shanghai Studies,” Journal of the History of Ideas 71.2 (April 2010), 313-33.

“Chart of the Japanese Embassies to the Tang Court,” online at: http://chinajapan.org/resources/j-to-tang.html; and “Chart to the Embassies to the Ming Court,” online at: http://chinajapan.org/resources/j-to-ming.html.

“Issues in the Evolution of Modern China in East Asian Comparative Perspective,” The History Teacher 29.4 (August 1996), 425-48; reprinted in China’s Quest for Modernization: Historical Studies on Issues Concerning the Evolution of Modern Chinese Society, ed. Frederic Wakeman, Jr. and Wang Xi (Center for East Asian Studies, University of California, 1997), 352-81.

Book Reviews

Suping Lu, They Were in Nanjing: The Nanjing Massacre Witnessed by American and British Nationals, and Fei Fei Li, Robert Sabella, and David Liu, eds., Nanking 1937: Memory and Healing, in China Review International 15.1 (2008), 146-55.

Alexander Woodside, Lost Modernities: China, Vietnam, Korea, and the Hazards of World History, in The Chinese Historical Review 13.2 (Fall 2006), 405-7.

Inger Sigrun Brodey and Sammy I. Tsunematsu, trans., Rediscovering Natsume Sōseki, with the First English Translation of Travels in Manchuria and Korea, in Journal of Asian Studies 61.4 (November 2002), 1372-73.

Nicholas Clifford, “A Truthful Impression of the Country”: British and American Travel Writing in China, 1880-1949, in American Historical Review 107.4 (October 2002), 1196.

Rana Mitter, The Manchurian Myth: Nationalism, Resistance, and Collaboration in Modern China, in The Journal of Interdisciplinary History 32.3 (Winter 2002), 512-13.

Constantine N. Vaporis, Breaking Barriers: Travel and the State in Early Modern Japan, in Journal of Asian Studies 55.1 (February 1996), 179-80.

“Several Recent Works in Sino-Japanese Studies: The Modernization of Manchuria: An Annotated Bibliography by Ronald Suleski, Ajia jidai no Nit-Chū kankei, kako to mirai (Sino-Japanese relations in the Asian age, past and future) edited by Kojima Tomoyuki, Japanese Scholars of China: A Bibliographical Handbook compiled by John Timothy Wixted, and Jindai Ri-Zhong guanxi shi yanjiu rumen (Introduction to studies in the history of modern Sino-Japanese relations), transl. Zhou Qiqian,” in Sino-Japanese Studies 8.1 (October 1995), 66-68.

Shen Ren’an, Wakoku to Higashi Ajia (The state of Wa and East Asia) and Wu Anlong and Xiong Dayun, Chūgokujin no Nihon kenkyū shi (A history of Chinese studies of Japan), in Ribenxue 5 (1995), 323-26.